<h2> IV. PETER RABBIT FOOLS JIMMY SKUNK </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>ETER RABBIT came
hopping and skipping down the Crooked Little Path. Unc' Billy Possum
always calls him Brer Rabbit, but everybody else calls him Peter. Peter
was feeling very fine that morning, very fine indeed. Every few minutes he
jumped up in the air, and kicked his heels together, just for fun.
Presently he met Jimmy Skunk.</p>
<p>Jimmy was on his way back from Farmer Brown's corn field, where he had
been helping Blacky the Crow get free from a snare. Jimmy was still
tickling and laughing over the way Blacky the Crow had been caught. He had
to tell Peter Rabbit all about it.</p>
<p>Peter thought it just as good a joke as did Jimmy, and the two trotted
along side by side, planning how they would spread the news all over the
Green Meadows that Blacky the Crow, who thinks himself so smart, had been
caught.</p>
<p>"That reminds me," said Jimmy Skunk suddenly, "I haven't had my breakfast
yet. Have you seen any beetles this morning, Peter Rabbit?"</p>
<p>Peter Rabbit stopped and scratched his long left ear with his long left
hind foot.</p>
<p>"Now you speak of it, it seems to me that I did," said Peter Rabbit.</p>
<p>"Where?" asked Jimmy Skunk eagerly.</p>
<p>Peter pretended to think very hard.</p>
<p>"It seems to me that it was back at the top of the Crooked Little Path up
the hill," said Peter.</p>
<p>"I think I will go look for them at once," replied Jimmy.</p>
<p>"All right," replied Peter, "I'll show you the way."</p>
<p>So up the Crooked Little Path hopped Peter Rabbit, and right behind him
trotted Jimmy Skunk. By and by they came to an old pine stump. Peter
Rabbit stopped. He put one hand on his lips.</p>
<p>"Hush!" whispered Peter. "I think there is a whole family of beetles on
the other side of this stump. You creep around the other side, and I'll
creep around this side. When I thump the ground, you spring right around
and grab them before they can run away."</p>
<p>So Jimmy Skunk crept around one side of the stump, and Peter Rabbit crept
around the other side. Suddenly Peter thumped the ground hard, twice.
Jimmy Skunk was waiting and all ready to spring. When he heard those
thumps, he just sprang as quickly as he could. What do you think happened?</p>
<p>Why, Jimmy Skunk landed <i>thump!</i> right on Reddy Fox, who was taking a
sun nap on the other side of the pine stump!</p>
<p>"Ha, ha, ha," shouted Peter Rabbit, and started down the Crooked Little
Path as fast as his long legs could take him.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<h2> V. REDDY POX GETS INTO TROUBLE </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">R</span>EDDY FOX, curled
up behind the big pine stump, was dreaming of a coop full of chickens,
where there was no Bowser the Hound to watch over them. Suddenly something
landed on him with a thump that knocked all his breath out. For an instant
it frightened Reddy so that he just shook and shook. Then he got his
senses together and discovered that it was Jimmy Skunk who had jumped on
him.</p>
<p>Jimmy was very polite. He begged Reddy's pardon. He protested that it was
all a mistake. He explained how Peter Rabbit had played a trick on both of
them, and how he himself was just looking for beetles for breakfast.</p>
<p>Now, Reddy Fox is very quick tempered, and as soon as he realized that he
had been made the victim of a joke, he lost his temper completely. He
glared at Jimmy Skunk. He was so angry that he stuttered.</p>
<p>"Y-y-you, y-y-y-you, y-y-y-you did that on p-p-purpose," said Reddy Fox.</p>
<p>"No such thing!" declared Jimmy Skunk. "I tell you it was a joke on the
part of Peter Rabbit, and if you don't believe me, just look down there on
the Green Meadows."</p>
<p>Reddy Fox looked. There sat Peter, his hands on his hips, his long ears
pointed straight up to the blue sky, and his mouth wide open, as he
laughed at the results of his joke.</p>
<p>Reddy shook his fist.</p>
<p>"Ha, ha, ha," shouted Peter Rabbit.</p>
<p>Reddy Fox looked hard at Jimmy Skunk, but like all the other little meadow
and forest people, he has a very great respect for Jimmy Skunk, and though
he would have liked to quarrel with Jimmy, he thought it wisest not to.
Instead, he started after Peter Rabbit as fast as his legs could go.</p>
<p>Now, Reddy Fox can run very fast, and when Peter saw him coming, Peter
knew that he would have to use his own long legs to the very best of his
ability. Away they went across the Green Meadows. Jimmy Skunk, sitting on
top of the hill, could see the white patch on the seat of Peter Rabbit's
trousers bobbing this way and that way, and right behind him was Reddy
Fox. Now, Peter Rabbit could run fast enough to keep away from Reddy for a
while. You remember that Peter's eyes are so placed that he can see behind
him without turning his head. So he knew when Reddy was getting too near.</p>
<p>In and out among the bushes along the edge of the Green Meadows they
dodged, and the more he had to run, the angrier Reddy Fox grew. He paid no
attention to where they were going; his whole thought was of catching
Peter Rabbit.</p>
<p>Now, when Peter began to grow tired he began to work over towards Farmer
Brown's corn field, where he knew that Farmer Brown's boy was hiding, with
Bowser the Hound. Dodging this way and that way, Peter worked over to the
fence corner, where Jimmy Skunk had watched Blacky the Crow get caught in
a snare. He let Reddy almost catch him, then he dodged out into the open
corn field, and Reddy, of course, followed him, "Bow-wow, bow-wow-wow!"</p>
<p>Reddy did not need to turn to know what had happened. Bowser the Hound had
seen him and was after him. Peter just ducked behind a big bunch of grass
and sat down to get his breath, while Reddy started off as hard as he
could go, with Bowser the Hound behind him.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<h2> VI. REDDY FOOLS BOWSER THE HOUND </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>WAY across the
Green Meadows and up the hill through the Green Forest raced Reddy Fox at
the top of his speed. Behind him, nose to the ground, came Bowser the
Hound, baying at the top of his lungs. Reddy ran along an old stone wall
and jumped as far out into the field as he could.</p>
<p>"I guess that will fool him for a while," panted Reddy, as he sat down to
get his breath.</p>
<p>When Bowser came to the place where Reddy had jumped on the stone wall, he
just grinned.</p>
<p>"That's too old a trick to fool me one minute," said Bowser to himself,
and he just made a big circle, so that in a few minutes he had found
Reddy's tracks again.</p>
<p>Every trick that Reddy had heard old Granny Fox tell about he tried, in
order to fool Bowser the Hound, but it was of no use at all. Bowser seemed
to know exactly what Reddy was doing, and wasted no time.</p>
<p>Reddy was beginning to get worried. He was getting dreadfully out of
breath. His legs ached. His big, plumey tail, of which he is very, very
proud, had become dreadfully heavy. Granny Fox had warned him never, never
to run into the snug house they had dug unless he was obliged to to save
his life, for that would tell Bowser the Hound where they lived, and then
they would have to move.</p>
<p>How Reddy did wish that wise old Granny Fox would come to his relief. He
was running along the back of Farmer Brown's pasture, and he could hear
Bowser the Hound altogether too near for comfort. He looked this way and
he looked that way for a chance to escape. Just ahead of him he saw a lot
of woolly friends. They were Farmer Brown's sheep. Reddy had a bright
idea. Like a flash he sprang on the back of one of the sheep. It
frightened the sheep as badly as Reddy had been frightened, when Jimmy
Skunk had landed on him that morning.</p>
<p>"Baa, baa, baa!" cried the sheep and started to run. Reddy hung on
tightly, and away they raced across the pasture.</p>
<p>Now Bowser the Hound trusts wholly to his nose to follow Reddy Fox or
Peter Rabbit or his master, Farmer Brown's boy. So he did not see Reddy
jump on the back of the sheep, and, of course, when he reached the place
where Reddy had found his strange horse, he was puzzled. Round and round,
and round and round Bowser worked in a circle, but no trace of Reddy could
he find.</p>
<p>And all the time Reddy sat behind the stone wall on the far side of the
pasture, getting his wind and laughing and laughing at the smart way in
which he had fooled Bowser the Hound.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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